As you all know, Tu Bish'vat is the Jewish New Year of the Trees/ראש השנה לאלנות. With the coming of this festival every year, we concentrate on two major ideas and actions: the greening of the land of Israel and Judaism's laws that focus on protection of the environment. Typically, as a festival approaches, I provide you with a packet with a selection of texts, which we study together, in order to learn more about the celebration that is upon us. For Tu Bish'vat this year, we are going to change our process.
Judaism has a rich tradition of teachings on the subjects of ecology and environmental protection. Going back as far as the TaNaKH, our tradition has commanded all of humanity to take control of preserving and protecting the Earth, and making the environment better for the generations that will live on it long after we are gone. For our Tu Bish'vat unit this year, Grade 7 students will become the teachers of the class on the subject of Judaism and Ecology.
ASSIGNMENT:
Each Grade 7 student will be responsible for finding ONE traditional text teaching on the subject of Judaism and Ecology. There are several on-line resources that are available for you to use to locate and select your teaching. No two students in the same class will be permitted to use the same text. However, this is NOT an exercise in speed to try and get your teaching picked before everyone else. Not only will you have to find teachings and then choose one, but you will also have to evaluate the sources of the texts you find and make decisions about their quality, explain the text you eventually choose and why you chose it specifically (make a personal connection), and then present the teaching to the class in a short presentation. BEFORE YOU MAKE A FINAL DECISION ON YOUR TEXT, YOU MUST CHECK IT WITH RABBI BELLAS TO MAKE SURE THAT NO ONE ELSE HAS SELECTED IT.
1) Research Texts
With your laptop, conduct some on-line research on the topic of Judaism and Ecology/Judaism and the Environment. Browse through your results thoughtfully and select a teaching from Jewish tradition that offers insight into how human beings are instructed to treat the Earth and the environment. You will not be allowed to use texts from the TaNaKH. I want you to become exposed to texts/resources from a variety of different sources. You should be doing your own research and searches in order to uncover texts for this project. However, here is a site which you can use as a search engine for Jewish environmental teachings to help you along: ON ONE FOOT - a website through which you can search for Jewish texts on MANY different topics.
This site also provides some texts that may interest you without having to search to hard: Jewish Green Quotes
2) Evaluate the Texts and Their Sources
Once you have a few worthy options before you, thoughtfully consider them on the following grounds:
a. Does this teaching provide a meaningful message about Judaism and the environment?
b. Do I find something in the teaching that is meaningful to me PERSONALLY?
c. Does the source of this teaching (where I found it on-line) seem reliable enough that I can trust using it for this assignment?
d. Will I be able to present/teach/explain this text to my fellow classmates in a SHORT classroom presentation?
3) Select YOUR Teaching (Approved by Rabbi Bellas)
After you have completed all of the tasks for #1, and #2, then you will post the text of your teaching into your class' shared google doc with the citation for your source (i.e. the precise URL from which it came and the book source where the original teaching can be found). The links for the documents are just below.
4) Prepare a Presentation for the Class
This presentation is NOT intended to force you to create any kind of labor-intensive presentation board or digital presentation at home with many different special effects....etc. Your focus should be content. You will need to create a presentation, but you will be given adequate time to complete the presentation in class, IF YOU USE YOUR TIME WISELY. You should invest your time in preparing information on the topics to present to the class:
a. Your text
b. The source of your text (from what book does your text come and explain what this source is)
- Title of the source
- Time period during which the source was written (be specific)
- Who is the author (for some sources, the information will not be available)?
c. What is the ecological/environmental lesson of your text? How does this text connect Judaism to environmental concerns?
Sometimes, a text needs explanation beyond what the literal translation means. Be prepared to explain the text so that your classmates understand it.
d. What are the practical/behavioral implications of the teaching? Does it give us a specific command or is it a general statement? What should we DO as a result of this teaching? What is this teaching's connection to modern world issues/problems?
e. Why did you choose THIS teaching over all others that were options for you? Talk about why this text was personally interesting to you/how it spoke to you...etc.
Grading Rubric - To be used by Rabbi Bellas and peer evaluators during the presentations.
Judaism & Ecology Unit Homepage
As you all know, Tu Bish'vat is the Jewish New Year of the Trees/ראש השנה לאלנות. With the coming of this festival every year, we concentrate on two major ideas and actions: the greening of the land of Israel and Judaism's laws that focus on protection of the environment. Typically, as a festival approaches, I provide you with a packet with a selection of texts, which we study together, in order to learn more about the celebration that is upon us. For Tu Bish'vat this year, we are going to change our process.
Judaism has a rich tradition of teachings on the subjects of ecology and environmental protection. Going back as far as the TaNaKH, our tradition has commanded all of humanity to take control of preserving and protecting the Earth, and making the environment better for the generations that will live on it long after we are gone. For our Tu Bish'vat unit this year, Grade 7 students will become the teachers of the class on the subject of Judaism and Ecology.
ASSIGNMENT:
Each Grade 7 student will be responsible for finding ONE traditional text teaching on the subject of Judaism and Ecology. There are several on-line resources that are available for you to use to locate and select your teaching. No two students in the same class will be permitted to use the same text. However, this is NOT an exercise in speed to try and get your teaching picked before everyone else. Not only will you have to find teachings and then choose one, but you will also have to evaluate the sources of the texts you find and make decisions about their quality, explain the text you eventually choose and why you chose it specifically (make a personal connection), and then present the teaching to the class in a short presentation. BEFORE YOU MAKE A FINAL DECISION ON YOUR TEXT, YOU MUST CHECK IT WITH RABBI BELLAS TO MAKE SURE THAT NO ONE ELSE HAS SELECTED IT.1) Research Texts
With your laptop, conduct some on-line research on the topic of Judaism and Ecology/Judaism and the Environment. Browse through your results thoughtfully and select a teaching from Jewish tradition that offers insight into how human beings are instructed to treat the Earth and the environment. You will not be allowed to use texts from the TaNaKH. I want you to become exposed to texts/resources from a variety of different sources. You should be doing your own research and searches in order to uncover texts for this project. However, here is a site which you can use as a search engine for Jewish environmental teachings to help you along:
ON ONE FOOT - a website through which you can search for Jewish texts on MANY different topics.
This site also provides some texts that may interest you without having to search to hard: Jewish Green Quotes
2) Evaluate the Texts and Their Sources
Once you have a few worthy options before you, thoughtfully consider them on the following grounds:
a. Does this teaching provide a meaningful message about Judaism and the environment?
b. Do I find something in the teaching that is meaningful to me PERSONALLY?
c. Does the source of this teaching (where I found it on-line) seem reliable enough that I can trust using it for this assignment?
d. Will I be able to present/teach/explain this text to my fellow classmates in a SHORT classroom presentation?
3) Select YOUR Teaching (Approved by Rabbi Bellas)
After you have completed all of the tasks for #1, and #2, then you will post the text of your teaching into your class' shared google doc with the citation for your source (i.e. the precise URL from which it came and the book source where the original teaching can be found). The links for the documents are just below.
7A Tu Bish'vat Teachings
7B Tu Bish'vat Teachings
7C Tu Bish'vat Teachings
4) Prepare a Presentation for the Class
This presentation is NOT intended to force you to create any kind of labor-intensive presentation board or digital presentation at home with many different special effects....etc. Your focus should be content. You will need to create a presentation, but you will be given adequate time to complete the presentation in class, IF YOU USE YOUR TIME WISELY. You should invest your time in preparing information on the topics to present to the class:
a. Your text
b. The source of your text (from what book does your text come and explain what this source is)
- Title of the source
- Time period during which the source was written (be specific)
- Who is the author (for some sources, the information will not be available)?
c. What is the ecological/environmental lesson of your text? How does this text connect Judaism to environmental concerns?
Sometimes, a text needs explanation beyond what the literal translation means. Be prepared to explain the text so that your classmates understand it.
d. What are the practical/behavioral implications of the teaching? Does it give us a specific command or is it a general statement? What should we DO as a result of this teaching? What is this teaching's connection to modern world issues/problems?
e. Why did you choose THIS teaching over all others that were options for you? Talk about why this text was personally interesting to you/how it spoke to you...etc.
Grading Rubric - To be used by Rabbi Bellas and peer evaluators during the presentations.
Class Presentations start dates:
7A - February 14th, 2014
7B - February 14th, 2014
7C - February 12th, 2014